Audiogon "RECORDINGS TO DIE FOR" list


I've been listening to some of my favorite recordings this weekend and was wondering what others on Audiogon felt were there favorites. We have all seen the Stereophile "Records to Die For", The Absolute Sounds recommended list, Music Directs' list, The Golden Ear, etc. now I'm hoping to assemble the Audiogon "Recordings To Die For". Please list your five favorite recordings, the ones you listen to over and over or play for friends. I would assume the sonic quality is excellent in that this is an audiophile site. The performance and enjoy ability should also be excellent. Please leave your top five, even if they are already chosen so we can discover the very top for the Audiogon listeners. ALSO PLEASE REFRAIN FROM CRITICIZING OTHERS OPINIONS AND JUST LEAVE YOUR FAVORITES!

August 2002: I have compiled a summary and a full printer-friendly list of all of the recommendations below.
click here to view summary
128x128jadem6
Another one is Patricia Barber *Nightclub*. It is atleast
an Audiophile recording. It is slightly more transparent than *Modern Cool*, being recorded in a nightclub, where it is dead quiet, and the noise floor is the reason, I think, that it sounds even better. There wasn't a crowd of people there, in fact, it was completely quiet. I get to see what my system will do with these 2 cds, plus a small handful of others.
All of the Tindersticks albums are or were available on vinyl and contain wonderful music, but the pressing quality has been variable at best. The one to die (and look out) for is the fourth LP, "Simple Pleasure" (1999), the vinyl version of which was pressed by Simply Vinyl, who got it right. Sadly, they're weren't many pressed and they're highly sought after (one just sold on eBay for around $40). If you see one, don't hesitate!
In a glass house - Gentle Giant
Aja - Steely Dan
Chicago Transit Athority
Faces - Earth, Wind, & Fire
Dark side of the moon - Pink Floyd
Blood, Sweat, and Tears
Abbey Road - Beatles
Beatles- Sgt. Pepper
Steve Earle- Jerusalum
Rebecca Pidgeon- The New York Girl's Club
Sade- Love Deluxe
Neil Young- Harvest Moon
I just finished listening to Tomasz stanko "From the gree hill" and it was pretty amazing.
Female Vocal-Track 11- "A Case Of You"- Diana Krall's "Live in Paris"
Female Vocal- Track 5- " Light My Fire"- Jacintha "Jacintha is Her Name"
Acoustic Guitar- Track 1- "No Messin" - Acoustic Alchemy "Radio Contact"
Instrumental Jazz(fogrein- Track 6- "Mistral"- Toshihiro Akamatsu "Six Intentions"
Piano (Medleys)- "Autumn in Seatle" CD by Tsuyoshi Yamamoto

These are my current favorites which I enjoy listening just about every day/night. My 2ch system: ML Ascent, Mc402, SF line2SE, Pioneer CLD-C604 LD/CD player.
Ataulfo Argenta Edition (box set)
Liszt 'Annees de Pelerinage' D.G. Lazar Berman
Suzanne Vega 'Solitude Standing'
Patti Smith 'Horses'
Gilbert and Sullivan 'Mikado" D'Oyly Carte Opera Company
Sinatra 'Come Fly With Me'
Cannonball Adderly 'Mercy"
Four Favorite Trios by Stern, Rose and Istomin
Pink Panther Mancini
The best recording that I own is Dean Peer's "Ucross." I first heard this recording playing through a pair of Martin Logans in a high end audio store, and it turned out that they liked that CD so much that they arranged with the artist to sell it out of their store. I bought the last one they had in stock. Dean is a solo bassist, but before you say, "Run for the hills, a full-length bass solo album!", you should know that Dean uses a high degree of dynamics and harmonics, and an unusal array of basses and strings. The result does not sound like any "bass solo" you have ever heard. He is a true song-writer, and each song has independant rhythm, melody and harmony. I don't know how he does it, but the end result is impressive. Whenever I audition new audiophile equipment, I take this CD with me, and the sales staff is always impressed with its imaging, harmonics, and dynamics. Truly a great recording if you can get your hands on it.

Other favorites would include:

Eric Clapton - Unplugged
Bob Dylan - Highway 61 Revisited (remastered)
Dishwala - Pet Your Friends
Pink Floyd - Dark Side of the Moon

Later, Tom.
Thanks for the recommendation, Tom. I'll be on the lookout for that recording! BTW: I was listening to the remastered HW61 last night... great stuff!
Dean Peer , "Its All Good " , Sting " Living Sea " , Janice Ian " Breaking Silence" , Seal " One " , and the sacd version of Beck s " Sea Change ".
Grew up with Rock but always had a wimpy system so tended to search for more "intimate" recordings but it's hit or miss with musical content and/or sonics. Have many I never listen to...
Here's some that are great all around:

Bjork "Vespertine"
Radiohead "Amnesiac"
Nick Cave "Boatman's Call"
XTC "Apple Venus Vol 1"
Miles Davis "Filles De Kilimanjaro" Columbia (remastered)
Gil Evans "The Individualism of Gil Evans" Verve\
Jack JeJohnette "Tin Pan Alley" w/Freeman bros. (ECM-Vinyl)

Tired of what I have, any swappeds out there?

A
in no order:

Pink Floyd "Dark Side of the Moon", Miles Davis "Kind of Blue", Sade "Promise", Stone Temple Pilots "Core" (DVD Audio), Led Zeppelin "Houses of the Holy", Beatles "Abbey Road"(really almost any album), Mozart Symphonies any Chicago Symphony recordings, U2 "The Joshua Tree", Dixie Chicks "Fly"
One more that I forgot to mention is Thomas Dolby's "Aliens Ate My Buick." Great tunes, great recording. "Airhead" is a tune that I often use (in addition to my Dean Peer CD) when auditioning new gear.

Tom.
1961 "Bayreuth" Parsifal reisue: Knappertsbusch, Hotter, London, Thomas.
"Symphonie Fantastique" conducted by Bernstein in 1963.
Shostakovich 5th symphonie, also by Benrstein...etc.
I picked up a CD about a year ago called "El Cielo" by a band called "Dredg". IMHO one of the best recordings to come around in a long time. Other than this, I have nothing to list that hasn't already been listed.
Mike Oldfield "AMAROK" . The more you listen to it the better it gets. Much of Mike Oldfield's music is that way. Most people only know him from Tubular Bells.
Sara Brightmna "DIVE" would be a good one too.
Damien "In Concert from Bucharest" . I saw him on a PBS special. The show did not do him justice.
This is a great list. I found some on here where I thought that I was the only one who knew about them. I was wrong. Here are four which are mysteriously not here:

Sonny Rollins, "Saxophone Colossus" (JVC XRCD)
Sonny Rollins, "The Bridge" (Bluebird-)
Bill Evans, "Conversations with Myself" (Bluebird)
Charles Mingus, "New Tijuana Moods" (RCA Reissue)
Joe Jackson "Body and Soul"
Joni Mitchell "Wild Things Run Fast"
James Taylor "Hourglass"
If you like (progressive )latin jazz, a MUST listen is "Orlando Cachaito Lopez"
A fantastic recording of the best living Cuban musicians .The performances are stunning.
Strings,bass ,conga ,electric guitar,timbales ,horns.What a showcase for your system.The recording is perfect on the congas.It makes me shudder to think of what a lame job Chesky did on "Conga Kings",recording and performance wise
Sneakin' Suspicion by Jack Semple
Time Loves a Hero by little Feat
Close to the Edge by Yes
Aja by Steely Dan
Slow Down by Keb Mo..some of these have been on my fav list for more than 25 yrs! Hard to pick a top 5. My list would probably be different a week ago or a week from now...
These are the recordings that I need to face this desert island.
Professor Longhair - Rock'n Roll Gumbo
Sarah Vaughn - No Count Sarah
Joe Cocker - With a Little Help From My Friends
World Saxophone Quartet - Revue
Ellen McIlwayne - We the People
Santana - III
Batacumbele - In Concert at the University of PR
John Coltrane - Giant Steps
Mario Bauza - Tanga Suite
Led Zeppelin - II
Doc Watson - Doc Watson
James Carter - Chasin' the Gypsy
Alfred Brendel - Beethoven Sonatas (Vox Box)
Simon and Garfunkel - Bridge Over Troubled Water
Hawaiian Slack Key Guitar Masters (Dancing Cat)
Holmes Brothers - In the Spirit
Minoru Nojima - Nojima Plays Liszt
Joan Baez - Joan Baez
David Grisman Quartet - Hot Dawg
Los Lobos - La Pistola Y El Corazon
Paul Simon - Your the One
Phineas Newborn - The Great Jazz Piano of PN
Thelonious Monk - Monk's Music
Beatles - Revolver
Rolling Stones - Let it Bleed
George Benson - Bad Benson
Stevie Ray Vaughn - In Step
Johnny Winter - Third Degree
Katie Webster - Swamp Boogie Queen
The Meters - Fire on the Bayou
Frank Sinatra - In the Wee Small Hours
Tony Bennett and Bill Evans - The TB BE Album
Eric Dolphy - Out to Lunch
Clifford Brown/Max Roach - Vol. 1
Albert Ayler - The Village Concerts
Even though the following may not be my 5 favorites (Beatles, Stones, Who, Led etc) I am attempting to list a few that aren't here already.
1. The Butts Band - "The Complete Recordings." Two former Doors make two albums as the Butts Band, the cd i got from Amazon has both on one disc. Simply great rock, r&b, and soul. Two different lead singers on each album, and the sound is good, but a little compressed.
2. Norman Blake/Tut Taylor/Sam Bush/Butch Robins/Vassar Clements/David Holland/Jethro Burns. Distributed by Flying Fish records (1975). It was recorded at Hound's Ear studio in Nashville, TN on June 22, 1974. No name, this LP simply has those names on the cover with each of their pictures. This is a blugrass/jazz album. They got these guys together to jam and recorded it. Wonderful music! Side 1 - Sweet Georgia Brown, Sauerkraut 'N solar energy, The old brown case (unbelievable solo acoustic guitar instrumental from Norman), 'A' Train. Side 2 - Going home, Mckinley's blues, Oconee, Vassar & Dave. My vinyl copy is getting old, it somehow survived the crazy years, but not unscathed. If you find this on any medium get it. If it's on cd, please let me know.
3. Waylon Jennings - "Dreaming my dreams." Possibly the best country album ever recorded.
4. The Flatlanders - "Now and again." Not a country dog in the bunch.
5. Eric Clapton - "Live in the Seventies." (Crossroads 2) This is a 4 cd box set that has only gotten mixed reviews. However, some of Eric's best blues guitar playing is on it. Since it's live he stretches out on some "old familiars" and more obscure blues. Even some of his mellow crooner tunes sound better than the studio versions.
For classical fans: PROKOFIEV "Scythian suite" "Alexander Nevsky"
Conductor: Gergiev Kirov on Philips 289 473 600-2

BACH PARTITAS NOS 1,3&6 Richard Goode
Nonesuch 79698-2

BACH "The concertos for one and Two Harpsichords" Raymond Leppard, Andrew Davis, Philip Ledger and English Chamber Orchestra Philips 454 268-2

MOZART Piano Sonatas Fantasy in D minor, K397 K310, K311 & K533/494
Alfer Brendel Philips 289 473 689-2


Hey! There is a similar post on the Apogee Acoustics Users Group.Here's my pics that can take you to that special place we are continually trying to find.....(CD)Kenney Barron & Minu Cinelu-title, Swamp Sally.(CD)Trilok Gurtu-tile,Glimps(SACD)Mickey Hart-title,Planet Drum.(LP)Bireli Lagrene-title,Foreign Affairs.(SACD)"River of Sorrow"FIM..Thank's,John
ACCENT - two Lps of J. Haydn trios for flute, violin and cello, with all three of the Kuijken brothers.
Pierre Fournier
Bach Cello Suites
Best on original CD not remastered digital rerelease
note: Unaccompanied Cello Suite actually got 4 votes on this list - just different performances. Fournier 2 YoYoMa 2
Goldberg variations got...2 also?
Shelby Lynne 'Identity Crisis'
Sarah Chang 'R. Strauss Violin Concerto & Sonata in E flat for Cello and Piano' EMI Classics
Alicia Keys 'Songs in A minor' This one because I don't even like hip hop, rap or most rhythm and blues and I can't stop playing this one or at least most of the songs on it.
Norah Jones 'Feels Like Home' Didn't think I was going to like this one very much... thought it might be 'OK'. But--it has snuck into my regular rotation, and has a dominating presence there.
If you don't like Jazz....this could turn you.
Just about everything the Rippingtons have recorded.
Sensational recordings draw the best from your gear.
Its always finding music that has been recorded well. Below are just music choices

Miles Davis: Kind of Blue
Beatles: Abbey Road...why no good remastered CD or SACD yet?
Weather Report: Heavy Weather
Stevie Ray Vaughn: Texas Flood
James Brown: Funk Power 1970: same as Abbey Road...
RY COODER-PARIS TEXAS SOUNDTRACK (WARNER BROTHERS)
RICKIE LEE JONES-RICKIE LEE JONES (WARNER BROTHERS)
DAVE BRUBECK-TIME OUT (CLASSIC RECORDS)
CHET BAKER-CHET (ANALOGUE PRODUCTIONS)
MILES DAVIS-KIND OF BLUE (CLASSIC RECORDS)
BILL CONNORS-OF MYST AND MELDING (ECM)
BILL EVANS-WALTZ FOR DEBBIE (ANALOGUE PRODUCTIONS)
STEELY DAN-GAUCHO
BEN WEBSTER-LIVE AT THE RENAISSANCE (ANALOGUE PRODUCTIONS)
AMBROSIA-SOMEWHERE I NEVER TRAVELLED (WARNER BROTHERS)
Some really nice stuff listed above!...That Norah Jones "Feels like home" is a real smoothy. Brothers in arms rocks!...Kkagawa: yes..I love all 3 you listed! Joe Jackson rocks great!...Another of my favorites is Suzanne Vega's "Solitude Standing" Her cut of "Fancy Poultry "is so cool. Im a sucker for female vocals.
John Mayer...Heavier Things
Peter Mallik group featuring Norah Jones...New York City

Just about anything mastered by Bob Ludwig, that guy is good.
Some of these are available on CeeDee, but my recs are based upon vinyl playback.

1. Schubert: Arpeggione Sonata in A Minor. Rostropovich, cello & Britten, piano (King Super Analogue Reissue).

2. Count Basie: 88 Basie Street (Analogue Productions 45 rpm reissue).

3. Tori Amos: Famous Blue Raincoat from The Songs of Leanord Cohen CD.

4. Michael Ruff: Wishing Well from the Speaking in Melodies (Sheffield Labs).

5. Albeniz: Suite Espanola. DeBurgos (Decca SXL 6355).

.... and a bonus choice of Yamamoto: Midnight Sugar on the Three Blind Mice label.
Muddy Waters - Folk Singer redone by Classic Records on 200 gram vinyl is simply awesome - A must have for audiophiles, get it now before it's gone!
-SARAH BRIGHTMAN "TIME TO SAY GOOD BYE" (this is not even the best track)
-KIRAN AHLUWALIA "KASHISH ATTRACTION" (pure female vocals)
-ANTONIO CARLOS JOBIM "JAZZ MASTERS #13 (a greatest hits)
-SHAWN PHILLIPS "SECOND CONTRIBUTION" (great recording)
-LEONARD COHEN "SONGS OF LEONARD COHEN" (great music)
-KEITH JARRET "KOLN CONCERT"
-SANTANA "ABRAXIS"
-NEIL YOUNG "AFTER THE GOLD RUSH"
-DAVE BRUBECK "TIME OUT"
In no particular order:
#1 John Coltrane - Blue Train
#2 Miles Davis - Kind of Blue
#3 Jeff Beck - Blow By Blow
#4 Grateful Dead - Dick's Picks Volume 18 (HDCD)
#5 The Radiators - Live at The Great American Music Hall (also HDCD but it is not mentioned on the disk or artwork)
This may have been posted already, but I'm too lazy to check every post.

Open fire, Two Guitars - Johnny Mathis the remastered version - listen before you laugh
Who would laugh at Johnny Mathis? He is a great singer and has had an extraordinarily long and productive career.

BTW-I have read that as a collegian in 1954, he posted a high jump record of 6' 5-1/2" which was about 2 inches short of the then existing Olympic record.

He was often referred to as "the best all-around athlete to come out of the San Francisco Bay Area." How's that for the singer of "Chances Are"!
Rebecca Pidgeon, The Raven. Bought this a few years ago and listened to it once. It was recorded in 1994 and was transferred to SACD hybrid by Chesky a few years ago. When I purchased my SACD player about six weeks ago, I listened to it as it was the only SACD I owned. What a revelation! Finest sound I have ever heard including all of my vinyl. It sounds sensational in CD Redbook also. Wendy's Style Shop, cut 10 is my favorite. I listen to it over and over just to hear the sound quality. My family is going to have me committed pretty soon. Spanish Harlem is good too but a little too much reverberation. For the first time I have heard drums sound like real drums. The are other great songs on this recording also.

Another great recording is Allison Krauss and Union Station Live. New Favorite is my favorite cut. Holographic sound.
Shaver - Tramp on Your Street
Ten Years After - A Space in Time
Danny Gatton - Cruisin' Dueces
Brian Auger - Closer to It
Willie Nelson - Across the Borderline
Audience - House on the Hill
All the Lyle Lovett recordings I've heard sound great. One of my favorite show-off tracks is Penguins from I Love Everybody.

Mel Torme Swings Shubert Alley.

Keith Jarrett playing Handel's Suites for Piano.

Steely Dan, Two Against Nature

John Scofield, A Go Go
For those of you who appreciate solid drums and funky bass...
Chili Peppers "Funky Monks" & "Walkabout"

and if you really like bass you've got to hear
Travis Larson Band "Georgia on my Mind" w/phenom bassist Victor Wooten (It's on iTunes I believe)
Stereophile July 2003 awarded 5 stars to Telarc's recording of the Hovhaness Symphony#2. I tried to find it thru Tower and Amazon to no avail.

I went to Telarc's web site and learned that they have in in SACD. I
have not yet received it but am eager to hear this one.

Max Young
Doc Watson's "intrumentals" or something like that. I have listened to that over and over.
Here's my list, I look forward to seeing yours. (*I also started new thread for favorite ecclectic collection so we could begin fresh)

1.Govinda "Entwined and Entranced" (An amazing recording with synth, guitar, rich vocal accents and sounds undescribable)

2.Patick O'Hearn "Trust" (Ambient,New Age, synth)

3.Karsh Kale "Liberation" (Sound will pour from this CD, synth,programing,Madras Orchestra and much more....your speakers will scream)

4.Ulver "Perdition City" (Dark ODD well recorded CD of strange sounds and images)

5.Kruder and Dorfmeister "K and D Sessions" (For those who thought they would not like techno, strong recording!)

6. Brainbox "Primordia" (Another one of my strange CD'S...a feast for ears)

7. Preston Reed "Metal" (Accoustic Guitar Virtuoso)

8. Unitone "A Portrait of Strings" (A compilation of some amazing accoutic guitar artists)

9. Pat Metheney "Quiet Nights" (Accoustic Guitar Baritone
solo)

10. Robert Stanton "Accoustic Storm" (20 Bit recording, hard to find)

11.Joe Banamassa "blues deluxe" (One of the better recorded rock/blues genre. Ths guy is amazing)

12. Ryan Adams "Gold" (Nice recording and good song writing, a tad melancholy but solid)

13.Al DiMeola "Kiss My Axe" (One of my favorite recordings, tons of info to hear, very crisp)

14.Jackson Browne "The Naked Ride HOme" (Sweet recording, voice is pwoerful, musicians tight, great song writing, his best IMHO)

15. Suzanne Vega "Songs in Red and Grey" (Her best IMHO)

16. Echo and Bunnymen "Flowers" (All around SOLID rock CD, Vocals excellent, songs memorable)

I'm sure we all have many more, I'm gonna stop here, all take care, and happy listening.
Wow, I am up to 4 pages in Word and not half way through the list. OK, here are some I have loved (sorry for the repeats)

Keith Jarrett - Koln Concert, Arbor Zena (just awesome, maybe my all time fav...)
Debussey - Trois Nocturnes
Patsy Cline - Greatest Hits
The Band - The Band
Ray Charles - Modern Sounds in Country & Western Music
Van Morrison - Moondance